Dietary supplement Potassium iodide is a nutritional supplement in animal feeds and also in the human diet. In humans it is the most common additive used for iodizing
table salt (a public health measure to prevent
iodine deficiency in populations that get little seafood). The oxidation of iodide causes slow loss of iodine content from
iodised salts that are exposed to excess air. The alkali metal iodide salt, over time and exposure to excess oxygen and carbon dioxide, slowly oxidizes to metal carbonate and elemental iodine, which then evaporates.
Potassium iodate (
KIO3) is used to iodize some salts so that the iodine is not lost by oxidation.
Dextrose or
sodium thiosulfate are often added to iodized table salt to stabilize potassium iodide thus reducing loss of the volatile chemical.
Thyroid protection in nuclear accidents seen like a dark sphere in center of the body. Image is by
MIBG scintigraphy with radiation from
radioiodine in the MIBG. Note unwanted uptake of radioiodine from the pharmaceutical by the thyroid gland in the neck, in both images (front and back) of the same patient. Radioactivity is also seen in the bladder.Thyroid iodine uptake blockade with potassium iodide is used in
nuclear medicine scintigraphy and therapy with some radioiodinated compounds that are not targeted to the thyroid, such as
iobenguane (
MIBG), which is used to image or treat neural tissue tumors, or iodinated
fibrinogen, which is used in
fibrinogen scans to investigate clotting. These compounds contain iodine, but not in the iodide form. Since they may be ultimately metabolized or break down to radioactive iodide, it is common to administer non-radioactive potassium iodide to ensure that iodide from these radiopharmaceuticals is not sequestered by the normal affinity of the thyroid for iodide. The World Health Organization (WHO) provides guidelines for potassium iodide use following a nuclear accident. The dosage of potassium iodide is age-dependent: neonates (<1 month) require 16 mg/day; children aged 1 month to 3 years need 32 mg/day; those aged 3-12 years need 65 mg/day; and individuals over 12 years and adults require 130 mg/day. The same dosage is recommended by the US
Food and Drug Administration. A single daily dose is typically sufficient for 24-hour protection. Not all sources are in agreement on the necessary
duration of thyroid blockade, although agreement appears to have been reached about the
necessity of blockade for both
scintigraphic and therapeutic applications of iobenguane. Commercially available iobenguane is labeled with
iodine-123, and product labeling recommends administration of potassium iodide 1 hour prior to administration of the radiopharmaceutical for all age groups, while the
European Association of Nuclear Medicine recommends (for iobenguane labeled with either isotope), that potassium iodide administration begin one day prior to radiopharmaceutical administration, and continue until the day following the injection, with the exception of new-borns, who do not require potassium iodide doses following radiopharmaceutical injection. Product labeling for diagnostic
iodine-131 iobenguane recommends potassium iodide administration one day before injection and continuing 5 to 7 days following administration, in keeping with the much longer half-life of this isotope and its greater danger to the thyroid. Iodine-131 iobenguane used for therapeutic purposes requires a different pre-medication duration, beginning 24–48 hours prior to iobenguane injection and continuing 10–15 days following injection. In 1982, the U.S.
Food and Drug Administration approved potassium iodide to protect
thyroid glands from
radioactive iodine involving accidents or fission emergencies. In an accidental event or attack on a
nuclear power plant, or in
nuclear bomb fallout, volatile
fission product radionuclides may be released. Of these products, (Iodine-131) is one of the most common and is particularly dangerous to the thyroid gland because it may lead to
thyroid cancer. By saturating the body with a source of stable iodide prior to exposure, inhaled or ingested tends to be excreted, which prevents radioiodine uptake by the thyroid. According to one 2000 study "KI administered up to 48 h before exposure can almost completely block thyroid uptake and therefore greatly reduce the thyroid absorbed dose. However, KI administration 96 h or more before exposure has no significant protective effect. In contrast, KI administration after exposure to radioiodine induces a smaller and rapidly decreasing blockade effect." According to the FDA, KI should not be taken as a preventative before radiation exposure. Since KI protects for approximately 24 hours, it must be dosed daily until a risk of significant exposure to radioiodine no longer exists. Emergency 130 milligrams potassium iodide doses provide 100 mg iodide (the other 30 mg is the potassium in the compound), A likely
lethal dose of salt (more than a kilogram) would be needed to equal the potassium iodide in one tablet. The
World Health Organization does not recommend KI prophylaxis for adults over 40 years, unless the radiation dose from inhaled radioiodine is expected to threaten thyroid function, because the KI side effects increase with age and may exceed the KI protective effects; "...unless doses to the thyroid from inhalation rise to levels threatening thyroid function, that is of the order of about 5
Gy. Such radiation doses will not occur far away from an accident site." ==Side effects==